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Video: Bush announces Rumsfeld resignation

WASHINGTON — President Bush on Wednesday congratulated Democrats on their takeover of the House and strong gains in the Senate and announced he had selected a new defense secretary to oversee the increasingly violent conflict in Iraq.

Bush, reaching into the administration of his father, said that former CIA Director Robert Gates would replace Donald M. Rumsfeld as defense secretary.

To the end, Bush defended Rumsfeld's troubled tenure, calling him "a patriot who served this country with honor and distinction."

Rumsfeld and the Iraq factor
"I recognize that many Americans voted last night to register their displeasure with the lack of progress being made" in Iraq, the president said. "Yet I also believe most Americans - and leaders here in Washington from both political parties - understand we cannot accept defeat."

He seemed stoic about the election, proclaiming "this isn't my first rodeo."

Gates led the CIA, under then-President George H.W. Bush, from November 1991 to January 1993.

"Bob Gates will bring a fresh perspective and great managerial experience," Bush said.

Congressional scandals
Bush expressed both disappointment and surprise over the election results and said he had called Democratic leaders to personally congratulate them. "Actually, I thought we were going to do fine yesterday," Bush said. "Shows what I know."

He quipped that he had given House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi the name of a Republican interior decorator to help her pick out drapes for her new office - poking fun at the California Democrat's pre-election remark about having her pick of Capitol suites.

As to the role played in Tuesday's widespread GOP losses, Bush said, "I believe Iraq had a lot to do with the election, but I think there were other factors as well." He suggested that a variety of congressional scandals may also have played a role.

He said he would seek to find "common ground" with Pelosi, but without either of them compromising their principles. She will become the first-ever woman to be speaker of the House.

Bipartisan efforts
Bush was asked at his East Room news conference about Pelosi's past derogatory comments describing him as a liar and dangerous.

"I know when campaigns end and governing begins," he said. "If you hold grudges in this line of work, you never get anything done."

Bush said "this is not the first campaign that people have expressed themselves in different kinds of ways."

Control of Congress
In Tuesday's midterm elections, Democrats recaptured control of the House after 12 years of GOP rule and erased the Republican majority in the Senate. One race remained to be decided, Virginia, where Democrat James Webb held a slight lead of Republican Sen. George Allen.

If Democrats win that seat, they will have a 51-vote majority to a GOP 49-vote minority. If Allen wins, the next Senate will split 50-50.

Bush said he wanted to hear other views on Iraq, and was looking forward to recommendations by a commission headed by former Secretary of State James A. Baker III and former Democratic Rep. Lee Hamilton of Indiana.

Still, Bush added, "We're not going to leave before the job is done."

Almost six in 10 voters disapproved of the war in Iraq, exit polls showed.

Democrats who will control the House and may control the Senate had been near unanimous in their call for Rumsfeld to step aside.

Midterm revaluation?
Asked about whether the election would change his second-term priorities, Bush said, "Winning this war on terror is still the most important priority."

Bush also got in a dig at his trusted top political adviser, Karl Rove, who is widely credited with Bush's presidential victories in 2000 and 2004 and GOP gains in the 2002 midterms. As recently as last week, Rove flatly predicted Republican would retain both House and Senate.

"I obviously was working harder in the campaign than he was," said Bush, who stumped hard for GOP candidates, especially troubled ones in traditionally Republican states.

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